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Designed by Giancarlo Piretti
“The Symbol of a new era focused on plastic”. That’s how Plia chair was presented in 1967 at the Fiera del Mobile in Milan. During the Fair, the Plia got so much acclaim from audiences that many visitors moved away from the stand with some samples without asking for permission… As a result of this unhorthodox compliment the chairs were tied with chains for safety. With the Plia chair the designer, Giancarlo Piretti, has revolutionized the concept of folding chair, and his study on the “three-disc hinge” is considered a stroke of genius. The combination of steel and polypropylene frame has paved the way for Plia which has become a cult object. Plia represents the realization of “democratic design” and it is nowadays exposed at the design sector of the MoMA in New York. Thanks to this chair, which millions of copies have been sold, Giancarlo Piretti,
Variation
$1,890.00
Designed in 1970 by Giancarlo Piiretti, plona is a folding and stackable armchair. A truly unique design that combines aesthetics, functionality and comfort.
$3,590.00
A multifunctional modern and iconic lounge chair, perfectly combining comfort, design and modularity. Alky?s design allows for individual use or linked together to form a sofa.
$1,130.00
“The Symbol of a new era focused on plastic”. That’s how Plia chair was presented in 1967 at the Fiera del Mobile in Milan. During the Fair, the Plia got so much acclaim from audiences that many visitors moved away from the stand with some samples without asking for permission… As a result of this […]
$3,080.00
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Born out of the fascination by those big rattan or cane armchair so common in South East Asia, Patricia Urquiola creates her own sophisticated rendition.Volumes expand, braids are doubled, patterns appear unexpectedly and gracefully fragmented. The Pavo collection introduces a strong exotic connotation.
$750.00
Nesso is an icon of Italian design from the ?6s, a decade that heralded the conquest of modernity in which design redefined the domestic landscape though the first uses of plastics. Innovative and democratic, its expressive form inspired by nature interprets and challenges industrial manufacturing technology.
$1,030.00
Lampe de Marseille was named after the Unit? d?Habitation in Marseille, the massive building designed between 1949 and 1952 by Le Corbusier and a symbol of Brutalist architecture.